A. Philip Randolph Biography

Born: April 15, 1889
Crescent City, Florida
Died: May 16, 1979
New York, New York
African American civil rights leader and trade unionist

The American labor and civil rights leader A. Philip Randolph, considered
the most prominent of all African American trade unionists, was one of the
major figures in the struggle for civil rights and racial equality.

Early life and education

Asa Philip Randolph was born in Crescent City, Florida, on April 15,
1889, the second of two sons of James and Elizabeth Randolph. His father
was a traveling minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and
his mother was also devoted to the church. Both of his parents were
strong supporters of equal rights for African Americans. The young
Randolph had a close relationship with his older brother, William. The
brothers' early childhood games included role playing in which
they worked for African American rights. The family moved to
Jacksonville, Florida, in 1891. Asa attended local primary schools and
later went on to the Cookman Institute in Jacksonville, Florida.

In the spring of 1911 Randolph left Florida for New York City, where he
studied at the City College of New York while working as an elevator
operator, a porter, and a waiter. While taking classes at the City
College, Randolph discovered great works of literature, especially those
of English playwright William Shakespeare (1564–1616), and he
also began to sharpen his public speaking skills.

Beginning the fight

Following his marriage in 1914 to Lucille E. Green, he helped organize
the Shakespearean Society in Harlem and played the roles of Hamlet,
Othello, and Romeo, among others. At the age of twenty-one Randolph
joined the Socialist Party of Eugene V. Debs (1855–1926). (The
Socialist Party is a political party that believes the producers, or
working class, should have the political power and ability to distribute
goods.) In 1917 Randolph and Chandler Owen founded the
Messenger,
a radical publication now regarded by scholars as among the most
brilliantly edited work in African American journalism.

Randolph's belief that the African American can never be
politically free until he was economically secure led him to become the
foremost supporter of the full integration of black workers into the
American trade union movement (bringing blacks into the ranks of trade
unions, which fight for the rights of workers). In 1925 he undertook the
leadership of the campaign to organize the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car
Porters (BSCP), which would become the first African American union in
the country. The uphill battle, marked by fierce resistance from the
Pullman Company (who was then the largest employers of African Americans
in the country), was finally won in 1937 and made possible the first
contract ever signed by a white employer with an African American labor
leader. Later, Randolph served as president emeritus (honorary
president) of the BSCP and a vice-president of the American Federation
of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations.

A. Philip Randolph.
Reproduced by permission of

Fisk University Library

.

Making changes

In the 1940s Randolph developed the strategy of mass protest to win two
major executive orders, or orders from the government. In 1941, with
America's entrance into World War II (1939–45), he
developed the idea of a massive march on Washington, D.C., to protest
the exclusion (to keep out) of African American workers from jobs in the
industries that were producing war supplies. He agreed to call off the
march only after President Franklin Roosevelt (1882–1945) issued
Executive Order 8802, which banned discrimination (selection based on
race) in defense plants and established the nation's first Fair
Employment Practice Committee. In 1948 Randolph warned President Harry
Truman (1884–1972) that if segregation (separation based on race)
in the armed forces was not abolished (to put an end to), masses of
African Americans would refuse entering the armed forces. Soon Executive
Order 9981 was issued to comply with his demands.

In 1957 Randolph organized the Prayer Pilgrimage to Washington to
support civil rights efforts in the South, and in 1957 and 1958 he
organized a Youth March for Integrated Schools. In August 1963, Randolph
organized the March on Washington, D.C., fighting for jobs and freedom.
This was the site of Martin Luther King Jr.'s (1929–1968)
famed "I Have a Dream," speech, and a quarter million
people went in support. Randolph was called "the chief" by
King. And in 1966, at the White House conference "To Fulfill
These Rights," he proposed a ten-year program called a
"Freedom Budget" which would eliminate poverty for all
Americans regardless of race.

Legacy

The story of Randolph's career reads like a history of the
struggles for unionization (creating trade unions) and civil rights in
this century. He lent his voice to each struggle and enhanced the
development of democracy (government by the people) and equality in
America. Randolph always said that his inspiration came from his father.
"We never felt that we were inferior to any white boys,"
Randolph said. "We were told constantly and continuously that
'you are as able,' 'you are as competent,'
and 'you have as much intellectuality as any
individual.'" Randolph died on May 16, 1979.

However, Randolph's message lived on. Seventeen years after his
death, Randolph's civil
rights leadership and labor activism became the subject of a 1996
Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) documentary, "A. Philip
Randolph: For Jobs and Freedom." The tribute that took him from
"obscurity" to a force that "moved
presidents," was presented during Black History Month, in
February, telling his story through reenactments, film footage, and
photos.

Included were powerful images of the quest, including the formation of
the National Association for the Promotion of Labor Unionism Among
Negroes in 1919 and the twelve-year battle to organize porters in spite
of the Pullman Company's use of spies and firings to stop it.

Throughout Randolph's years as a labor and civil rights leader,
he rocked the foundations of racial segregation, pressuring presidents
and corporations alike to recognize the need to fix the injustices
heaped on African Americans. Embracing a nonviolent, forward-looking
activism, Randolph will be remembered as both a radical activist and
"Saint Philip."